Oroville Mercury-Register

LinkedIn settles with US over alleged pay discrimina­tion

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SAN FRANCISCO » The career-networking service LinkedIn has agreed to pay $1.8 million in back wages to hundreds of female workers to settle a pay discrimina­tion complaint brought by U.S. labor investigat­ors.

The U.S. Labor Department announced Tuesday that it has reached a settlement agreement with LinkedIn to resolve allegation­s of “systemic, genderbase­d pay discrimina­tion” in which women were paid less than men in comparable job roles.

The settlement affects nearly 700 women who worked in engineerin­g, product or marketing roles from 2015 to 2017 at the company’s offices in San Francisco and Sunnyvale, California. It includes the time before and after Microsoft’s $26.2 billion acquisitio­n of LinkedIn in 2016.

LinkedIn said in a statement that “while we have agreed to settle this matter, we do not agree with the government’s claims; LinkedIn pays and has paid its employees fairly and equitably when comparing similar work.”

The settlement agreement says LinkedIn argued that its statistica­l models didn’t identify pay disparitie­s. The government said its own analysis found significan­t pay disparitie­s even after controllin­g for “legitimate explanator­y factors.”

The agency said the case was sparked by a routine evaluation by its Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs. Federal laws ban discrimina­tory practices at companies that contract with the federal government.

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